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10 Posts
Hello everyone
So I've seen a few posts about pressing onto the bottoms of mugs and I thought I'd share this press I found and purchased from Best Sub. It is simply called the Digital Mug Bottom Heat Press and as you can guess by the name is mainly intended for pressing on the outside bottoms of mugs. At the time of posting this, I haven't actually used it yet because it didn't come with any press times/temps.
If you look at the pictures I included you can see it basically uses plate attachments that you would get for certain presses and has a small pad attached to it (honestly I think it's just glued) that heats up and fits in the diameter of mug bottoms. The pad that goes into the mug bottom is not very large which is good and bad depending on what you were wanting to do.
I like that because it allows me to press on the three different size mugs that I sell with one attachment.
I don't like it because it limits the size of artwork that I could put on some of the larger mug bottoms.
The bottom is just a foam pad that conforms nicely and has a good balance of sturdiness and give so I haven't been worried about applying pressure vertically against the mugs. You're basically putting a lot of pressure downward against the mug's top, which isn't a very sturdy/solid base.
The control box arrived kinda crooked looking? Like it hangs kinda wonky but it's still sturdy and I don't believe it's going to break or anything like that. I think I could take the screws off the bottom where it attaches and bend the plate a little to straighten it.
Pressure adjusts very smooth and easily.
Overall I'm excited about having it but a little annoyed that really all it is, is a plate attachment. I feel like if you have one of those vertical heat presses with hat and plate attachments you could probably rig something like this up yourself. Maybe buy new plate attachments so you could different sizes for different mug bottom diameters.
If people are interested I'll post pictures of mugs I've pressed on and let you know how the process went with temps/times.
Thanks for reading!
So I've seen a few posts about pressing onto the bottoms of mugs and I thought I'd share this press I found and purchased from Best Sub. It is simply called the Digital Mug Bottom Heat Press and as you can guess by the name is mainly intended for pressing on the outside bottoms of mugs. At the time of posting this, I haven't actually used it yet because it didn't come with any press times/temps.
If you look at the pictures I included you can see it basically uses plate attachments that you would get for certain presses and has a small pad attached to it (honestly I think it's just glued) that heats up and fits in the diameter of mug bottoms. The pad that goes into the mug bottom is not very large which is good and bad depending on what you were wanting to do.
I like that because it allows me to press on the three different size mugs that I sell with one attachment.
I don't like it because it limits the size of artwork that I could put on some of the larger mug bottoms.
The bottom is just a foam pad that conforms nicely and has a good balance of sturdiness and give so I haven't been worried about applying pressure vertically against the mugs. You're basically putting a lot of pressure downward against the mug's top, which isn't a very sturdy/solid base.
The control box arrived kinda crooked looking? Like it hangs kinda wonky but it's still sturdy and I don't believe it's going to break or anything like that. I think I could take the screws off the bottom where it attaches and bend the plate a little to straighten it.
Pressure adjusts very smooth and easily.
Overall I'm excited about having it but a little annoyed that really all it is, is a plate attachment. I feel like if you have one of those vertical heat presses with hat and plate attachments you could probably rig something like this up yourself. Maybe buy new plate attachments so you could different sizes for different mug bottom diameters.
If people are interested I'll post pictures of mugs I've pressed on and let you know how the process went with temps/times.
Thanks for reading!
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